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Home » Research archive » Research Archive » Creating Space : Precarious Status Women Leading Local Pandemic Responses

Creating Space : Precarious Status Women Leading Local Pandemic Responses

EN / FR

Funder: WAGE Canada

Co- Principal Investigators: Luann Good Gingrich (Professor, School of Social Work), Heidi Matthews (Assistant Professor, Osgoode), Joel Ong (Associate Professor, AMPD)

Project Description:

Creating Space is a collaborative project co-directed by seven research directors from five faculties and six Organized Research Units at York U, with 13 community partners. The project centers precarious status women’s experiences to support self-determination and accelerate systemic change to address economic insecurity, promote frontline workplace safety, and reduce systemic gender-based violence in the context of COVID-19. Adopting a feminist and inclusive model for project development and implementation, the project examined how different groups of status-insecure women envision and enact local, collaborative models of self-determination to enhance their economic and physical security; conduct policy consultation workshops on labour and immigration law and policy, and on gender-based violence.

Funded by Women and Gender Equality Canada’s Feminist Response and Recovery Fund, the project advanced a feminist response to the current impacts of COVID-19 through systemic change. When women’s status in relation to the state is precarious, they are deprived of control over their lives and work. This project worked with 13 community partners representing female temporary foreign workers, asylum seekers, Indigenous women, and undocumented frontline workers – all of whom are disproportionately vulnerable to COVID-19 infection, economic hardship, and domestic violence owing to their status precarity.

The DIGITAL ARCHIVE is a multimedia collection of 100 short video interviews with women and gender-diverse people including precarious status women. The archive aims to shift public conversations concerning the pandemic and accelerating system change for communities across Canada. When you scroll down the page, you will find a graphic recording designed by Shannon Loomer and conceptually organized into themes/threads by Myrtle Sodhi. To explore the archive, you can hover over different sections of the graphic and click through to watch video interviews from the community organizations. Please note that the archive is best accessed on a laptop or desktop, and it may help to minimize your browser.

Community Partners

Advocacy with racialized women to end the exclusion of farm workers (Indo-Canadian and temporary foreign worker women), live-in home support workers, child care workers, and residential care workers from provisions of employment standards

BC Employment Standards Coalition

National alliance of women’s organizations advancing women’s equality by working for the full implementation of international human rights treaties.

Feminist Alliance for International Action

Parkdale Queen West Community Health Centre:  Advocates for healthy and just work environments for nail technicians.

Nail Salon Workers Project

Afro-contemporary dance company developing community-based approaches to anti-racism and social and economic inclusion.

KasheDance

Serves Toronto’s Caribbean community using dance to address gender-based violence and conflict resolution.

Caribbean Canadian Artistic Stars Inc.

Grassroots group in Jane-Finch community that helps marginalized and at-risk youth overcome social, mental, and or residential challenges to reconnect with their education and develop skills that will lead to a successful life. Areas of focus continue to include support for education, physical and mental health, housing, food and the arts. 

P.E.A.C.H.

Provincial network to improve the quality of life for Indigenous people living in an urban environment.

Ontario Federation of Indigenous Friendship Centres

Through professional theatre and related initiatives, responds to the persistent and universal need for promoting, understanding and embracing the core beliefs of feminism.

PerSIStence Theatre Company

A stripper-led organization made up of mostly current and former exotic dancers who work/ed in the Greater Toronto Area and other parts of Ontario.

Work Safe Twerk Safe

Migrant service organization empowering workers through service, information and advocacy

Migrants Resource Centre Canada

Works with affected communities to pursue innovative legal actions across borders, challenging powerful actors involved in human rights violations and systemic injustice.

Global Legal Action Network




Policy Workshop

Our community joined us for an introduction to our analysis methodology, where we delved into the diverse materials collected for the archive. Together, we explored preliminary data analysis findings, shared insights, and discussed the policy context. Your input shaped our understanding and guided further analysis
This session focused on translating insights from Day 1 into concrete policy and legal recommendations. Through participatory exercises, we creatively organized and refined our findings, ensuring they reflected the collective wisdom shared during our discussions. This led to the creation of the graphic recording.



NOVEMBER 28TH 2024

We are so happy to have held our virtual symposium on November 28th to celebrate the creative and collaborative work of Creating Space: Precarious Status Women Leading Local Pandemic Responses. Thank you so much to all those who joined us and shared the incredible work your organizations have contributed to the project. We are grateful for the discussions we had, and we hope to continue these important conversations and work about collective power building with you all.

During the symposium, we facilitated two group activities using Padlet. The first was an activity inspired by the Migrant Resource Centre Canada’s contribution to the project, in which participants introduced themselves in relation to their positionality in Canada and during COVID-19. The second Padlet helped us conclude the session by inviting members to share the work their groups are currently involved in. 


The Warp & The Weft  (2025)
Myrtle Sodhi 

An artist commission for the Creating Space project 
Gales Gallery, York University 
March 3-7 2025

Myrtle Sodhi will be exhibiting a sculpture called The Warp & The Weft, featuring "story-threads" that women and gender diverse people shared about the pandemic experiences. The stories wove in and out of each other similar to the way threads weave in and out of each other on a loom structure. 

The weaving of the stories speaks to Stephanie Toliver's quilting analogy where she explores the ways stories come together and come apart as they come up against each other.   The sculpture will feature sliced images where parts of the image is separated from other images in the same photograph to reveal the individual and collective stories they tell on their own and with the other images. These images are printed on layers of heritage washi paper. There will also be archival records and images that will speak to the way stories of the present day connect to stories of the past.